Cyclists, doors and streetcar tracks

The greatest risk to cyclists occurs when they share major streets with parked cars and no bike lanes where there is a heightened risk of injury from moving cars and car doors opening, researchers have found.

Their study, published in the current issue of the American Journal of Public Health, also confirmed what many cyclists in Toronto have long believed — that streetcar tracks are involved in nearly one-third of bicycle accidents

“This study has direct implications for the future of a transportation strategy in Toronto,” said Dr. Michael Cusimano, a professor in U of T’s Department of Surgery and a neurosurgeon at St. Michael’s Hospital, who was one of the researchers in the project. The lead author of the study was Kay Teschke, a Professor in the University of British Columbia’s School of Population and Public Health.

“Safety should be a major factor in any transportation decision,” Cusimano said.

Of the 690 crashes studied in Toronto and Vancouver, 96 directly involved streetcar or train tracks. Eighty-seven of those accidents were in Toronto, accounting for 31.5 per cent of all bike accidents in the city.

The researchers found that, of the accidents involving tracks, 19 cyclists (19.8 per cent) said their tires slipped on the tracks and 77 (80.2 per cent) said their tires got caught in the tracks.

Routes designed for cyclists — including bike lanes on major streets without parked cars, residential street bike routes and off-street bike paths — carry about half the risk of being injured on a randomly selected point on their journey, the study found.

Glen Bandiera, a professor in U of T’s Department of Medicine and head of the Emergency Department at St. Michael’s, estimates that in the summer, four or five patients arrive in the ER every day after a bicycle incident. The most common injuries are wrist fractures and shoulder dislocations from people using their arms to break their fall.

St. Michael’s was one of four hospitals in Toronto and Vancouver whose patients were tracked in the study.

The study also provided an interesting snapshot of who is being injured in all cycling accidents in the two cities: Most are men (59 percent), between the ages of 19 and 39 (62 per cent), who are regular cyclists (88 per cent) and completed post-secondary education (75 per cent).

Most were cycling to or from work or school (42 per cent) on a weekday (78 per cent) in daylight (77 per cent) and good weather (92.5 per cent). It found 68.3 per cent were wearing helmets, although that figure reflects the fact it’s mandatory for adults to wear helmets in British Columbia, but not in Ontario.

The single largest cause of bike accidents in the study was a collision with a motor vehicle (33.5 per cent).